Tuesday 18 June 2024

Owner of rundown St. Stephen properties no longer subject of report by development group

 

Owner of rundown St. Stephen properties no longer subject of report by development group

3 apartment buildings headed to mortgage sale after Starshine doesn’t pay

Several vacant apartment buildings in St. Stephen are headed to mortgage sales, while a local development group has abandoned its effort to find out more about the owner, whose rundown properties have upset neighbours. 

Buildings at 9 Schoodic St., 80 Union St. and 181 King St., all owned by Starshine Properties, are to be sold later this month. 

The company is owned by Alberta-based Annette Penkala, who bought about 20 properties in the southwestern New Brunswick town during the pandemic for a total of $2.4 million. 

Penkala keeps 9 Schoodic and 80 Union empty, and they have become an easy target for squatters. Several neighbours of both have told CBC that they are a blight on the neighbourhood. 

The buildings sit empty as St. Stephen deals with unprecedented homelessness. The town's only overnight homeless shelter, only blocks away from 80 Union, closed at the end of April. 

Penkala and her lawyer, Randall Wilson, were unable to be reached for comment.

Group stopped from delivering report to council

Future St. Stephen, an economic development group whose mandate includes housing concerns, was working on a report about Starshine Properties to present to St. Stephen council. 

At a council meeting in April, the agenda said "Starshine Properties update next month."

80 Union St. The vacant 80 Union St. building is one of the Starshine properties included in the mortgage sale. (Sam Farley/CBC)

But when councillors at that meeting questioned the group's president, Jeremy Barham, about the promised report, he said he was "sworn to secrecy."

At May's council meeting, the agenda said "No update yet on Starshine Properties."

And now, there is no plan for a report at all.

"No, I've had my hands slapped about that, and I'm not going to be giving any further reports," Barham said when reached by phone, refusing to explain why he was stopped from making the report or by whom.

Barham said Future St. Stephen wants to help solve the housing crisis and the Starshine properties issue was an "unfortunate development" taking away rental units from the town.

He would not say if it was the municipality that instructed him to abandon his report, but he confirmed his group is contracted by the municipality. 

Jeremy Barham poses for a photo Future St. Stephen president Jeremy Barham says the group is no longer compiling a report about Starshine Properties, but he won't say why. (Julia Wright / CBC)

But talking about a private company is a "sensitive topic," he said.

Questioned further about who why the report won't be done, Barham said he was "under a confidentiality agreement" and then stopped himself.

"I wish you would go away, I really do," he said in an interview.

"I know you're doing your job, but this is really, really frustrating.

"I know you have the right to [ask questions] but we're trying to solve a problem, and I don't think it's helping."

Mayor says he didn't stop report

St. Stephen Mayor Allan MacEachern said neither he nor anyone else from the municipality interfered with the development group's plan for a report, adding group is a separate entity "at arm's length" from the municipality. 

But he did question why a report was started at all about a private company. 

"No, we're not into doing reports on private businesses … that's not our business to get into people's business," MacEachern said.

He said Future St. Stephen's file included housing as part of its efforts to help fuel economic development.

Allan MacEachern speaks to reporters   St. Stephen Mayor Allan MacEachern says no one in municipal government stopped Future St. Stephen's report on Starshine Properties. (Graham Thompson/CBC News)

"Like I said, we shouldn't be talking about private businesses in my world at all," MacEachern said.

"We're here to work for them all, you've got to be careful of that stuff." 

Mortgage sale

According to notices posted in the Telegraph-Journal in April, the Schoodic and Union properties will be sold at a mortgage auction on June 26 by Marie Dianne Sullivan, operating as J&D Apartment Rentals Inc. 

She and her husband, Joe, owned the properties as landlords themselves before selling to Penkala. The notices say that if a "sufficient" offer is not received at the auction, Sullivan can sell the properties privately.

Under the New Brunswick Property Act, if a buyer does not pay off a mortgage on time, the mortgagee, in this case the  Sullivans, can sell the property at public auction to regain the  money owed to them.

Documents from Service New Brunswick show that the mortgage between Penkala and Sullivan was to be fully paid off by March 15. 

CBC News was unable to reach Sullivan.

A qualified hope for buildings

MacEachern said he's hopeful a buyer comes forward who can bring the buildings back to the town's housing stock.

"There's lot of appetite for places to live, so obviously I want them rejuvenated or replaced with newer apartments and housing for our people," MacEachern said.

But he said he recognizes that with the buildings in "bad" shape and high construction costs, it will be challenging to renovate the buildings and still keep rents affordable.

"You're seeing people get put out of places like these, they're getting renovated and then they can't afford them," he said.

"It's a hard balancing act there. We all want housing, but affordable housing is the word everyone wants to hear."

Neighbours hope for a change

Penkala's two buildings on Schoodic Street have been the subjects of police activity.

All tenants at the 9 Schoodic building were evicted under the SCAN act in 2022, a special law targeting drug and illegal activity. However, 16 Schoodic, another Starshine property nearby, was also the subject of a SCAN investigation in May, RCMP and the New Brunswick government confirmed.

9 Schoodic St. The buildling at 9 Schoodic St. is the subject of a coming mortgage sale. The building has been vacant since a SCAN eviction in 2022. (Sam Farley/CBC)

While No. 9 remains empty, CBC News observed that 16 is clearly inhabited this month.

Neighbours say 80 Union St. still has squatters breaking in from time to time, and when property managers aren't quick enough to act, neighbours work together to board up the house themselves.

"I guess confusion is the best word to use," Ron Jodrie, who has lived on Union Street since 1968, said of the mortgage sale.

Since Penkala took over, the property has had constant squatters, break-ins, and blatant drug use on the porch, he said of the nine-unit building.

If the building does sell, "we're concerned about who is going to purchase it and what their motive would be," Jodrie said.

"The building is in absolutely terrible condition. There's no way that it's livable."

16 Schoodic St. This building at 16 Schoodic St., also up for a mortgage sale, has been officially vacant since a SCAN eviction in May but is still being lived in by squatters. (Shane Fowler/CBC)

Jodrie hopes that a buyer will tear down the building and build new housing, but he's not optimistic.

If the new buyer continues to run the properties the same way, "we're just not willing to tolerate it anymore," Jodrie said.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Sam Farley

Journalist

Sam Farley is a Fredericton-based reporter at CBC New Brunswick. Originally from Boston, he is a journalism graduate of the University of King's College in Halifax. He can be reached at sam.farley@cbc.ca

CBC's Journalistic Standards and Practices
 
 
25 Comments
 
 
David Amos
"that's not our business to get into people's business," MacEachern said.

Yea Right

David Amos
Reply to David Amos
The plot thickens 
 
 
 
Daniel Henwel
Hard to imagine bulldozing the property before the sun rises or the fire marshall's office could determine a cause. The town must have been some anxious to get rid of the place! 
 
David Amos
Reply to Daniel Henwel
Methinks we should ask the RCMP/GRC about their suspicions N'esy Pas?  
 
 

james stewart 
methinks, there is more here than meets the eye.

the demolition of the one building that burned means

any investigation into the cause of the fire that consumed it,

is impossible.

to paraphrase Shakespeare,

is something rotten in the state of St Stephen?

Edward Manch
Reply to james stewart 
It is quite common to knock down parts, or all of a building before the investigation is complete. This is typically done at the direction of the fire marshal. The building has to be safe enough to enter. You would not enter a unstable half burnt building and hope it doesn't collapse while you are looking around.

They will already have a good idea on the area it started from fighting it. So sifting through rubble of that section won't be onerous.

 
David Amos 
Reply to james stewart
Methinks the old bard would enjoy a little Chiac as well N'esy Pas?
 
 
 
Ronald Miller 
Has the mayor declared a state of emergency yet?  
 
James Risdon
Reply to Ronald Miller  
What for?
 
David Amos 
Reply to Ronald Miller   
Any minute now
 
 
 
James Risdon
How much are these buildings/properties going for?

I might be interested in buying one and renovating it.

David Amos 
Reply to James Risdon
Yea Right 
 
 
 
Zoe Richmond  
St Stephen would be a great community in which to live especially for those who do cross border activity.
 
David Amos 
Reply to Zoe Richmond
Some folks would agree  
 
 
 
Anthony Fralick   
The building at 80 Union burnt to the ground last night.
 
David Amos 
Reply to Anthony Fralick   
Isn't that interesting?
 
David Amos 
Reply to Anthony Fralick  
I see they updated this article after you gave us the tip

'Sgt. Scott Mackenzie of the St. Stephen RCMP said the fire is being treated as suspicious'

Yea Right

 
 
Randy Dumont  
These buildings are perfect for gentrification.
 
David Amos 
Reply to Randy Dumont  
Perchance to dream 
 
 
 
Eugene Peabody   
Sure sounds like the owner from Alberta has enough money for legal help. A "confidentiality agreement" on the group and the mayor saying there should be no report on a "private business" is a red flag that there has been some serious pressure applied for some reason.
 
Edward Manch
Reply to Eugene Peabody
You've drawn a lot of conclusions based on no evidence. The confidentiality agreement is between Future St. Stephen and St. Stephen. This has nothing to do with having money for legal help.

I would agree with the mayor on spending tax dollars on a report specifically targeting a single private business is both a questionable use of money, sends a mixed message to the business community, and raises the question of where does the "investigation" end.

The important question that is not answered is why was a report on a single business ever being considered in the first place? Seems the money would have been better spent going towards new housing.

David Amos 
Reply to Edward Manch 
Hence the confidentiality agreement
 
 
 
Daniel Henwel  
Pretty scary looking buildings. Only way to fix them is with a bulldozer.
 
james stewart 
Reply to Daniel Henwel
your wish has been accomplished on at least one of them.

perhaps not so oddly, the bulldozing you called for,

has made an investigation of the cause of the fire impossible.

is something rotten in the state of St Stephen?

David Amos 
Reply to james stewart
Go Figure 
 
 
 

Owner of rundown St. Stephen properties no longer subject of report by development group

​3 Starshine-owned properties headed to mortgage sale include one where apartments destroyed by fire Monday

Three rundown properties in St. Stephen that have upset neighbours are headed to mortgage sales, while a local development group has abandoned its effort to find out more about the owner.

Buildings at 9 Schoodic St. and 181 King St., owned by Starshine Properties, are to be sold later this month.

A property at 80 Union St. is also on the list but burned down overnight Monday.

Sgt. Scott Mackenzie of the St. Stephen RCMP said the fire is being treated as suspicious, and an investigation with the New Brunswick Fire Marshal's Office is underway. 

Mackenzie said that no one was injured, since the building was vacant, and that the remains of the building were demolished Tuesday.

Despite repeated requests Tuesday, the St. Stephen Fire Department would not answer any questions about the fire.

Starshine is owned by Alberta-based Annette Penkala, who bought about 20 properties in the southwestern New Brunswick town during the pandemic for a total of $2.4 million. 

Penkala kept 9 Schoodic and 80 Union empty, and they became an easy target for squatters. Several neighbours of both have told CBC that they are a blight on the neighbourhood. 

The buildings sit empty as St. Stephen deals with unprecedented homelessness. The town's only overnight homeless shelter, only blocks away from 80 Union, closed at the end of April. 

Penkala and her lawyer, Randall Wilson, were unable to be reached for comment.

Group stopped from delivering report to council

Future St. Stephen, an economic development group whose mandate includes housing concerns, was working on a report about Starshine Properties to present to St. Stephen council. 

At a council meeting in April, the agenda said "Starshine Properties update next month."

But when councillors at that meeting questioned the group's president, Jeremy Barham, about the promised report, he said he was "sworn to secrecy."

An excavator in front of a pile of rubble Neighbours documented a fire that tore through the building at 80 Union St. on Monday night into Tuesday morning. By late morning, the building was almost completely torn down. (Submitted by David Whittingham)

At May's council meeting, the agenda said "No update yet on Starshine Properties."

And now, there is no plan for a report at all.

"No, I've had my hands slapped about that, and I'm not going to be giving any further reports," Barham said when reached by phone, refusing to explain why he was stopped from making the report or by whom.

Barham said Future St. Stephen wants to help solve the housing crisis and the Starshine properties issue was an "unfortunate development" taking away rental units from the town.

He would not say if it was the municipality that instructed him to abandon his report, but he confirmed his group is contracted by the municipality. 

But talking about a private company is a "sensitive topic," he said.

Jeremy Barham poses for a photo Future St. Stephen president Jeremy Barham says the group is no longer compiling a report about Starshine Properties, but he won't say why. (Julia Wright / CBC)

Questioned further about who why the report won't be done, Barham said he was "under a confidentiality agreement" and then stopped himself.

"I wish you would go away, I really do," he said in an interview.

"I know you're doing your job, but this is really, really frustrating.

"I know you have the right to [ask questions] but we're trying to solve a problem, and I don't think it's helping."

Mayor says he didn't stop report

St. Stephen Mayor Allan MacEachern said neither he nor anyone else from the municipality interfered with the development group's plan for a report, adding group is a separate entity "at arm's length" from the municipality. 

But he did question why a report was started at all about a private company. 

"No, we're not into doing reports on private businesses … that's not our business to get into people's business," MacEachern said.

He said Future St. Stephen's file included housing as part of its efforts to help fuel economic development.

Allan MacEachern speaks to reporters   St. Stephen Mayor Allan MacEachern says no one in municipal government stopped Future St. Stephen's report on Starshine Properties. (Graham Thompson/CBC News)

"Like I said, we shouldn't be talking about private businesses in my world at all," MacEachern said.

"We're here to work for them all, you've got to be careful of that stuff." 

Mortgage sale

According to notices posted in the Telegraph-Journal in April, the Schoodic and Union properties will be sold at a mortgage auction on June 26 by Marie Dianne Sullivan, operating as J&D Apartment Rentals Inc. 

She and her husband, Joe, owned the properties as landlords themselves before selling to Penkala. The notices say that if a "sufficient" offer is not received at the auction, Sullivan can sell the properties privately.

Under the New Brunswick Property Act, if a buyer does not pay off a mortgage on time, the mortgagee, in this case the  Sullivans, can sell the property at public auction to regain the  money owed to them.

Documents from Service New Brunswick show that the mortgage between Penkala and Sullivan was to be fully paid off by March 15. 

CBC News was unable to reach Sullivan.

A qualified hope for buildings

MacEachern said he's hopeful a buyer comes forward who can bring the buildings back to the town's housing stock.

"There's lot of appetite for places to live, so obviously I want them rejuvenated or replaced with newer apartments and housing for our people," MacEachern said.

But he said he recognizes that with the buildings in "bad" shape and high construction costs, it will be challenging to renovate the buildings and still keep rents affordable.

"You're seeing people get put out of places like these, they're getting renovated and then they can't afford them," he said.

"It's a hard balancing act there. We all want housing, but affordable housing is the word everyone wants to hear."

Neighbours hope for a change

Penkala's two buildings on Schoodic Street have been the subjects of police activity.

All tenants at the 9 Schoodic building were evicted under the SCAN act in 2022, a special law targeting drug and illegal activity. However, 16 Schoodic, another Starshine property nearby, was also the subject of a SCAN investigation in May, RCMP and the New Brunswick government confirmed.

9 Schoodic St. The buildling at 9 Schoodic St. is the subject of a coming mortgage sale. The building has been vacant since a SCAN eviction in 2022. (Sam Farley/CBC)

While No. 9 remains empty, CBC News observed that 16 is clearly inhabited this month.

Meanwhile, the building at 80 Union St. went up in flames on Monday at about 9:30 p.m., according to neighbour David Whittingham.

He said the St. Stephen Fire Department showed up shortly after the fire started. Fire trucks from Calais, Maine, across the border, were also there, said Whittingham.

Even as the fire department was hosing down the building, he said, an excavator showed up at about 2 a.m. and started pulling the building down. 

16 Schoodic St. This building at 16 Schoodic St. has been officially vacant since a SCAN eviction in May but is still being lived in by squatters. (Shane Fowler/CBC)

All that remained in the early hours of the morning was a small portion facing Cove Street. The demolition continued at about 10 a.m. Tuesday, with last remaining part of the structure coming down.

Whittingham said he hopes the town will remove the large amount of debris quickly.

Neighbours say 80 Union St. still had squatters breaking in from time to time, and when property managers weren't quick enough to act, neighbours worked together to board up the house themselves.

"I guess confusion is the best word to use," Ron Jodrie, who has lived on Union Street since 1968, said of the mortgage sale.

Since Penkala took over, the property has had constant squatters, break-ins, and blatant drug use on the porch, he said of the nine-unit building.

If the building does sell, "we're concerned about who is going to purchase it and what their motive would be," Jodrie said.

"The building is in absolutely terrible condition. There's no way that it's livable."

80 Union St. The vacant 80 Union St. building, one of the Starshine properties included in the mortgage sale, was destroyed by fire Monday night. (Sam Farley/CBC)

Jodrie hopes that a buyer will tear down the building and build new housing, but he's not optimistic.

If the new buyer continues to run the properties the same way, "we're just not willing to tolerate it anymore," Jodrie said.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR


Sam Farley

Journalist

Sam Farley is a Fredericton-based reporter at CBC New Brunswick. Originally from Boston, he is a journalism graduate of the University of King's College in Halifax. He can be reached at sam.farley@cbc.ca

With files from Hannah Rudderham

CBC's Journalistic Standards and Practices
 

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